spiritual buildings with amazing architecture · the most successful churches, chapels, temples,...
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SPIRITUAL BUILDINGS WITH AMAZING ARCHITECTURE
Throughout history religion has sparked the creation of some of the world’s most
beautiful architectural achievements. See how that tradition continues in AD’s survey of
breathtaking contemporary houses of worship
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Architects often aim to infuse their creations with meaning, but one type of structure
demands something particularly moving—a spiritual building. The most successful
churches, chapels, temples, synagogues, and mosques have at least one thing in
common: architecture that transforms raw, earthly materials into compositions so
powerful they evoke something beyond our world. No wonder sanctuaries from across
the ages remain among the most popular sights for global travelers. From the
Pantheon in Rome to the Hagia Sophia in Istanbul to Le Corbusier’s Notre Dame du
Haut chapel in Ronchamp, France, they are not just places of spiritual pilgrimage, but
architectural pilgrimage. That tradition continues as contemporary architects boldly
reimagine designs as old as religion itself.
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All Saints Chapel Martinho Campos, Brazil
Designed by Brazilian architect Gustavo Penna, this quaint, 1,700-square-foot chapel
is a meditation on simple materiality that modernizes a number of traditional Christian
motifs. A heavy, cross-shaped concrete structure, wider than it is tall, appears to be
supported by impossibly delicate glass walls. Outside, a slender rectangular reflecting
pool inspired by a baptismal font bisects the paved ground.
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Step through the entrance, however, and the building’s strong exterior suddenly fades
away—warm wood slats sheathe the interior surfaces, creating a cozy, inviting place of
respite. During the day, a long, linear skylight illuminates the chapel; at night, the whole
structure glows like a beacon atop the hill.
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Cathedral of Brasilia. Brazil
Oscar Niemeyer, the legendary Brazilian modernist who died at the age of 104 in
December, was famed for designing buildings with strong silhouettes. Among his most
iconic projects are the institutional buildings for the capital city of Brasília, of which his
cathedral is arguably the standout. Formed from a circle of 16 curved concrete columns
connected by wide swaths of glazing, the building appears to gather strength at the
ground, rising from a moatlike pool before bursting toward the heavens with open arms.
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Inside, ribbons of translucent blue, green, and off-white fiberglass snake overhead,
contrasting with three suspended statues of angels and the visible expanse of sky.
Moving from the cathedral’s entrance—a dark tunnel that passes beneath the water—
into the open, sun-drenched space feels a bit like arriving in another world.
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Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque. Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
This epic, opulent mosque, opened in 2007, is one of Abu Dhabi’s most iconic
buildings, clearly visible from the three main bridges connecting the island city to the
mainland. Large enough to hold 40,000 worshippers, the complex has 82 domes of
various sizes and a hand-knotted carpet in the main prayer hall that measures more
than 61,000 square feet—reportedly the world’s biggest.
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While the exterior is mostly clad in brilliant Sivec white marble from Greece, the
courtyard and interior offer an array of vibrant colors with intricate floral patterns inlaid
in the stone. With other decorative details realized in exquisite natural materials,
including semiprecious stones like lapis lazuli and amethyst, mother of pearl, and 24-
karat gold, the mosque is a lavish place of worship to behold.
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Jubilee Church. Rome.
Designed by Richard Meier, this church is one of the Pritzker Prize–winning architect’s
most celebrated works. One of its breathtaking features is a set of three large curved
walls that artfully allude to the Christian notion of the Trinity: the Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit. The gaps between the precast concrete waves, which are connected with glass,
offer separate entrances to the chapel and baptistery, while the nave is created by the
space where the last curved wall meets the rest of the rectilinear building.
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Inside, a cool, modern austerity prevails, with simple wood pews and a stone floor,
altar, and priest’s chairs. The building, which was completed in 2003, also has a
number of cleverly concealed green features—a titanium dioxide coating makes the
exterior self-cleaning and capable of scrubbing pollution, and the large thermal mass of
the concrete walls balances temperature throughout the day.
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Herz Jesu Kirche. Munich.
Munich’s Herz Jesu Kirche, or Sacred Heart Church, designed by Allmann Sattler
Wappner Architekten, is most famous for its striking sense of openness. The building
consists of an interior box made from vertical maple slats and a larger, exterior glass
box that completely contains it. The dramatically oversize blue glass–and-steel doors
let one entire side of the structure swing open to welcome churchgoers on special
holidays.
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The maple slats inside are spaced to maximize the flow of daylight into the area near
the altar, and the glass panels outside shift from transparent to opaque for privacy. A
walkway between the two boxes also depicts the Stations of the Cross.
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Catehdral of Christ the Light. Oakland, California.
Designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, this church was built on the site of the
Cathedral of St. Frances de Sales, which was damaged in the 1989 Loma Prieta
earthquake and later torn down. Opened in 2008, the 226,000-square-foot structure
couldn’t be more different than the Gothic Revival building it replaced, with a boldly
contemporary design realized in layers of curving concrete, glass, and wood.
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With a footprint based on the vesica piscis—the shape created by the intersection of
two equal circles—the cathedral reaches out diagonally toward Oakland’s Lake Merritt.
And with an exterior skin that’s open at both ends, it’s designed to appear welcoming to
the surrounding community. One of the church’s most intriguing features is a 58-foot-
tall image of Christ made from perforated-aluminum panels. During the day, the
architectural graphic is illuminated by sunlight; at night, it projects a haunting glow
toward the street.
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Martin Luther Church. Hainburg, Austria.
The fact that this church looks like it has been buffeted by winds shouldn’t be a
surprise—it was designed by Coop Himmelb(l)au, an Austrian architecture firm that
frequently creates buildings inspired by clouds. In this case, however, the design of the
roof for the 3,200-square-foot structure was actually informed by the curved roof of a
nearby Romanesque ossuary; its geometry was digitally twisted and prodded into a
contemporary swirl of steel with three circular skylights.
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Because of the resulting form’s complexity, the roof was manufactured at a shipyard,
along with a 66-foot-tall bell tower resembling a geyser of steel. Deferring to the
exterior architecture, the interior is kept deliberately spare, aside for a sculptural altar
backed by a perforated-wood screen cut with the shape of a cross.
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Chapel of Reconciliation. Berlin.
One of the architectural victims of the Berlin Wall was the Reconcilation Church, a neo-
Gothic structure completed in 1894. Located just steps from the church’s main
entrance, the wall cut off access to its congregation and left the building abandoned in
no-man’s-land, until it was almost completely demolished by the East German
government in 1985. After the wall came down, Berlin architects Peter Sassenroth and
Rudolf Reitermann set about designing this chapel on the same site as a
remembrance.
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Completed in 2000, the chapel consists of a rammed-earth structure wrapped by an
exterior screen, made with vertical wood slats, that creates a partially enclosed
promenade in between. Deliberately modest, the small, oval-shaped building is plainly
detailed and quietly contemplative. History feels incredibly close here—the church’s
altar remains in its original location, as do the cellar stairs, which had been boarded up
for decades. Even the original bells were rescued, and ring out with familiar-sounding
peals on Sundays.
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Baps Shri Swaminarayan Mandir. London.
A triumph of Indian stone carving, this building became Europe’s first traditional Hindu
temple when it was completed in 1995—and it remains a dramatic sight for people
more accustomed to sober English architecture. Embellished with incredibly intricate
hand-carved details, the structure was built from 26,300 pieces of stone, including
more than 3,000 tons of Bulgarian limestone and 1,200 tons of Italian marble.
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The temple was painstakingly sculpted, piece by piece, by more than 1,500 craftsmen
in India before being shipped to the building site for assembly. The interior is just as
impressive as the exterior, with a great hall topped by a dome measuring 28 feet in
diameter, which is capped by a 2.5-ton keystone and ornamented with elaborate floral
patterns.
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Edmond J.Safra Synagogue. New York.
Designed by the New York–based French architectThierry W Despont, this Beaux
Arts–style building on Manhattan’s Upper East Side is distinguished by thoughtful
grand gestures. The exterior and interior surfaces are clad in golden Jerusalem
limestone; the street entrance is set off by hefty 18-foot-tall bronze doors featuring a
tree of life design by artist Mark Beard; and the sanctuary is topped by a 45-foot-high
oval oak dome
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With classical details outside and a luxurious minimalism inside, the building, which is
designed to seat about 300 people, appears ready to inspire worshippers regardless of
aesthetic trends. Founded by Edmond J. Safra, the synagogue was completed in 2003,
four years after the banker’s mysterious death.
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Harajuku Church. Tokyo.
Designed by Ciel Rouge Création, an architecture firm with offices in Tokyo and Paris,
this Protestant church is as much about negative space as it is the monumental
concrete building itself. Constructed using six enormous undulating arches that are tied
together by ribbons of glazing, the porous building is designed to pull in beams of
natural light.
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The wildly curvaceous ceiling is intended not only to improve the interior’s acoustics,
but also to create the impression of an enormous hand reaching down from above. A
neighboring bell tower is a tall, slender triangular column of concrete with openings in
the shape of a cross—at certain times of day, the tower casts a shadow of the cross on
the church.
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U.S. Air Force Academy Cadet Chapel. Colorado Springs, Colorado.
Designed by Walter Netsch of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill and completed just over 50
years ago, in 1962, this groundbreaking chapel still appears as if it were pulled from the
frames of a futuristic science-fiction film. Its 17 aluminum, steel, and glass spires—
each composed of 100 tetrahedrons—evoke the feeling of fighter jets pointed skyward.
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Inside the 150-foot-tall building, there are separate worship areas for Protestant,
Catholic, Jewish, and Buddhist cadets. The largest space is the Protestant chapel,
located on the top floor, where thin strips of stained glass, transitioning from dark to
light colors as they rise along the edges of the spires, blanket the interior in a
multicolored glow. In recognition of the building’s timeless, influential design, the
American Institute of Architects awarded the chapel its annual Twenty-Five Year Award
in 1996.